NASA Awards Contract for Constellation Spacesuit for the
Moon
WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- NASA has awarded
an interim letter contract to Oceaneering International Inc. of
Houston to begin work on the design, development and production of
a new spacesuit system for the Constellation Program. The system
will protect astronauts during voyages to the International Space
Station and exploration of the moon's surface.
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The letter contract requires Oceaneering International to begin
work on the basic period of performance while NASA and the company
negotiate the contract's final terms. The current award amount for
the performance of the letter contract is limited to $9.6 million.
It will become effective March 2 and be in effect until the full
contract is defined, no later than Aug. 29, 2009.
The defined contract will include the same basic period of
performance and contract options as those in the contract awarded
in June 2008. The project schedule has been updated to align with
the latest Constellation Program schedule. Changes also were made
to include Federal Acquisition Regulation and NASA Federal
Acquisition Regulation Supplement updates. The schedule updates
result in a basic period of performance of March 2009 to September
2015. The extension of the period of performance is required to
support the Constellation Program schedule.
Option 1 covers completion of design, development, test and
evaluation for the moon surface suit components. It has been
adjusted to begin in October 2011 and run through September 2020.
Option 2, the suit astronauts will wear in the Orion crew module,
provides for production, processing and sustaining engineering
under a cost-plus-award fee or a firm-fixed-price,
indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract structure. It
will begin at the end of the basic performance period in October
2015 and run through September 2020.
The spacesuit and support systems will provide protection
against the launch and landing environment and spacecraft cabin
leaks. The system offers the ability to conduct contingency
spacewalks. For short trips to the moon, the suit design will
support a week's worth of moon walks. The system also must be
designed to support multiple spacewalks during potential six-month
lunar outpost expeditions. Suits and support systems will be needed
for as many as four astronauts on moon voyages and as many as six
space station travelers.
Images and animation of the new designs, as well as more
information about NASA's Constellation Program, are available
online at:
http://www.nasa.gov/constellation
SOURCE NASA
/CONTACT: Ashley Edwards, +1-202-358-1756,
ashley.edwards-1@nasa.gov, or Grey Hautaluoma, +1-202-358-0668,
grey.hautaluoma-1@nasa.gov, Headquarters, Washington, or Lynnette
Madison, lynnette.b.madison@nasa.gov, or Josh Byerly,
bill.j.byerly@nasa.gov, Johnson Space Center, Houston,
+1-281-483-5111, all of NASA
/Web site: http://www.nasa.gov